Pareidolia is a psychological phenomenon involving a vague and random stimulus (often an image or sound) being perceived as significant. Common examples include seeing images of animals or faces in clouds, the man in the moon, and hearing hidden messages on records played in reverse.

*Bot Special*

Evolutionary advantage-

-Carl Sagan hypothesized that as a survival technique, human beings are “hard-wired” from birth to identify the human face. This allows people to use only minimal details to recognize faces from a distance and in poor visibility but can also lead them to interpret random images or patterns of light and shade as being faces.

Exhibition presented from the American artist/painter Jonathan Sainz who currently lives on the island of Mykonos in order to complete his series of large scale oil on canvas paintings for Minima Gallery. — njoy

A L K A H E S T (ˈælkəˌhɛst) -n the hypothetical universal solvent sought by the alchemist
In this crystalline form everything is made of the multitude – the splendors
of Versailles, the rearing stallion and other distractions or ambitions. A curious history restlessly shifting, its charged particles and reflections dissolving into a universal something. Its mystical alignment ordered by instinct or impulse where themes emerge through incoherent leaps and the vague impressions of something more about to appear or having just faded.